Janet Muthoni Ouko – Elimu Pedia https://elimupedia.com Number One portal for matters education, How to, TSC,KUCCPS, HELB,KRA , Top 10 bests,and Parenting. Thu, 22 Jun 2023 04:02:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.9 Former Education CEC to Sue Sakaja Over School Feeding Program, Terming it Misappropriation https://elimupedia.com/former-education-cec-to-sue-sakaja-over-school-feeding-program-terming-it-misappropriation.html Thu, 22 Jun 2023 04:02:33 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=13257 Former Education CEC to Sue Sakaja Over School Feeding Program, Terming it Misappropriation

An activist has threatened to sue Nairobi Governor Johnson Sakaja over the School Feeding Programme, Dishi na County.

Education rights specialist Janet Ouko says the money should have been used to build schools as this would ease congestion and help the underserved.

In an open letter to Sakaja, Ouko said the governor had misplaced priorities and questioned why Sh1.2 billion should be spent annually on the project.

“We have evidence, lack of school feeding in Nairobi is not the number one reason why Nairobi children are out of school. Levies are!” she said.

Ouko said Nairobi only has 205 public primary schools and at least 3,000 non-formal schools are highly concentrated in Kibra, Mathare, Mukuru, Kibagare, Kiambiu, Maili Saba and Kawangware.

“Clearly, low-income to no-income areas where public schools are either absent or few and thus are not adequately covering the schoolgoing population,” she said.

Currently, Nairobi has space for only 28,000 children in its public ECED Centres.

The rest are attending non-formal centres or private schools, where their parents struggle with levies despite paying taxes to Nairobi county and despite their right to free and compulsory basic education, Ouko said.

“Feeding children from public schools only, therefore, means that the governor will only be feeding 11.2 per cent. Which begs the question, what is inclusivity?” she asked.

Out of 17 wards in the capital, 10 do not have a single public primary school.

These are Pipeline, Imara Daima, Ngando, Lindi, Laini Saba, Kware, Matopeni/Spring Valley, Saragombe and Lucky Summer.

“In a ward like Njiru that has only two public primary schools, there are more than 15 nonformal schools spread across the Laini Saba informal settlement,” Ouko said.

“While Jehova Jire Primary School in the neighbourhood is bursting with learners and the fact is the school cannot take up all the children from Saika, Mailisaba, Junction and Siranga.”

Instead of using the Sh1.2 billion on food, the former CEC has advised the governor to use the funds to build eight schools each year and only Sh100 million can be spent on each.

“This will help bring back more children to publicly funded education thus lending a big hand to ending the global crisis for good,” Ouko said.

Apart from seeking legal actions, Ouko had also said she would be seeking the Senate’s intervention to ensure pro-active response to avert the loss of value for money.

“We are asking the Senate, is county money to be spent at the governor’s discretion even when that discretion is clearly inconsistent with logic and the existing law,” she asked.

Also, the Nairobi county assembly shall be petitioned, especially the MCAs, whose wards have no single public primary school.

Already, a letter has been written to the Controller of Budget, requiring to reject county payments that are unconstitutional.

It cites the spending on mandates other than those given to the devolved governments by the Constitution of Kenya 2010.

But speaking in Roysambu, Sakaja told off critics over the school feeding programme.

“I know others will say primary education is not a devolved function but ECDEs are. As a governor, I cannot see children missing meals in schools and ignore,” he said.

“These children are residents of Nairobi and deserve the best.”

On the issue of lack of enough classrooms, President William Ruto pledged to construct additional 3,000 classrooms and Nairobi MCAs will add 1,500 more.

He said this will address the problem of lack of enough classrooms in schools.

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Biography Of Janet Muthoni  Ouko-  Age, Education, Career And Family https://elimupedia.com/biography-of-janet-muthoni-ouko-age-education-career-and-family.html Thu, 07 Jan 2021 02:12:37 +0000 http://elimupedia.com/?p=2187 Biography Of Janet Muthoni  Ouko-  Age, Education, Career And Family

Janet Muthoni  Ouko Birth

Janet Muthoni  Ouko  was born in 1980 in Lower Subukia, Nakuru County.

Janet Muthoni  Ouko Education

Janet Muthoni  Ouko went to Gatagati Primary School and later transferred to  Gitundaga Primary School where, she  completed her primary school.

After completing primary school, she joined Naivasha Girls Secondary School in 1995 and completed her secondary education in 1998. She then joined Moi University School of Business for a bachelor’s degree in management.

At Moi University, she got elected as the secretary general of the students’ union in her third year. She was the first lady in the university history to be elected in that capacity.

She got suspended for five years in her fourth year and resumed in 2007 to clear her university education.

Janet Muthoni  Ouko Career

Janet Muthoni  Ouko is an activist, a role which she started at the university and even got her suspended. After her suspension, began an NGO dealing with education rights advocacy

She has served as a Chief executive officer of Elimu Yetu Coalition.

She has headed several national level working groups within the education sector, including chairing the selection panel for the first national education board.

She attempted to unseat former Nairobi Woman representative, Rachel Shebesh, in a jubilee ticket.

She was appointed as a cabinet secretary, ministry of education in Nairobi county in 2017 but later resigned in 2018, claiming that she could work with Governor Mike Sonko.

She has again been appointed to serve as education minister in Nairobi County, by the current acting governor, Benson Mutura.

Janet Muthoni  Ouko Family

Janet Muthoni  Ouko is married to Mr. Ouko, with whom they have admirable children. She says she puts her family ahead of anything else, and can sacrifice anything, including her political ambitions, just for the sake of her family.

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